What the July 4, 2025 Tax Law Actually Changed for Individuals (Post-TCJA Era)

United States • Individual Tax Post-TCJA

On July 4, 2025, the One Big Beautiful Bill Act (OBBBA) reshaped how U.S. individual taxpayers file and save on taxes starting in Tax Year 2025. This guide breaks down every major individual income tax change—from rates & brackets and the SALT deduction, to the new No Tax on Tips and No Tax on Overtime deductions—using plain English, planning examples, and SEO-friendly checklists.

Updated: August 15, 2025 • Audience: U.S. Individual Taxpayers • Keywords: 2025 tax law changes, OBBBA guide, SALT cap $40,000, no tax on tips, no tax on overtime, AMT exemption, 199A QBI permanent, standard deduction permanent, estate and gift exemption 2025

Tags: individual tax 2025, U.S. taxes 2025, TCJA made permanent, SALT cap, child tax credit 2025, AMT, QBI 199A, QSBS, charitable deductions, casualty loss, car loan interest deduction

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1) Quick Overview of What Changed

Rates & Brackets

TCJA-style rates/brackets are now permanent (with minor tweaks and annual inflation indexing).

SALT Deduction

Cap temporarily increases (starting 2025) with a phase-out for higher incomes; never falls below $10,000.

New Deductions

Temporary No Tax on Tips, No Tax on Overtime, and certain vehicle loan interest deductions (time-limited).

AMT

Higher, permanent exemptions (with adjustments) reduce who pays AMT.

QBI / 199A

Permanent with modifications; wage/SSTB limits still matter.

Estate & Gift

Higher lifetime exemption, made permanent & indexed.

Who benefits? Most W-2 earners see similar or slightly better results than late-TCJA rules; high-tax-state households may benefit from the larger SALT cap but face income-based phase-downs. Tipped and overtime workers may see noticeable savings for 2025–2028.

2) Rates & Brackets: TCJA Structure Made Permanent

OBBBA permanently extends the TCJA income tax rate structure (with modest bracket adjustments). For individual taxpayers, the familiar seven-bracket layout remains, with annual inflation indexing.

  • Action for 2025: Update withholding and revisit safe-harbor estimates based on your 2024 tax liability.
  • Planning tip: If you usually itemize, re-run your standard vs. itemized decision under the new SALT and itemized-limit mechanics.

3) SALT Deduction: Temporary Higher Cap & Phase-Out

The SALT cap increases from $10,000 to as high as $40,000 (filing-status rules apply) starting in Tax Year 2025, but it phases down for higher-income taxpayers and never drops below the baseline $10,000 minimum deduction.

Filing StatusBase Cap (TY 2025)Phase-Out Start (MAGI)Guaranteed Minimum
Single / HOHUp to $40,000Income-based phasedown begins at higher-income thresholds per statute$10,000
MFJUp to $40,000Income-based phasedown begins at higher-income thresholds per statute$10,000
MFSUp to $20,000Income-based phasedown begins at higher-income thresholds per statute$5,000
High-tax-state playbook: Coordinate property tax timing, ensure AMT does not negate benefits, and evaluate PTET elections at the state level for business owners.

4) AMT: Higher Permanent Exemptions

OBBBA permanently increases the AMT exemption and adjusts phase-outs. Fewer middle-income households will owe AMT, but high earners with large ISO exercises, depreciation, or high add-backs should still model exposure.

  • Action: If you exercise ISOs or have significant preference items, run an AMT projection before year-end.

5) Standard vs. Itemized Deductions (Revised Limits)

The higher standard deduction introduced by TCJA is now permanent. Itemized deductions continue with revised limitations for upper-income filers (a modernized “Pease-style” approach). The optimal route—standard or itemize—will depend on your SALT, mortgage interest, and charitable strategy.

When Standard Wins

  • Low-to-moderate SALT + mortgage interest
  • Minimal charitable giving

When Itemizing Wins

  • Higher SALT within cap
  • Significant mortgage interest or charitable stacking

6) Pass-Through Deduction (Section 199A) Made Permanent

OBBBA makes the Qualified Business Income (QBI) deduction permanent—with tweaks. Wage and property tests, and Specified Service Trades or Businesses (SSTBs) limitations, still apply for higher-income owners.

  • Action: Track W-2 wages, unadjusted basis in qualified property (UBIA), and SSTB status to protect 199A.
  • Planner’s tip: Evaluate entity choice and reasonable compensation for S-corps under the new steady-state regime.

7) Excess Business Loss (IRC §461(l)) Now Permanent

The Excess Business Loss (EBL) limitation becomes a permanent feature with thresholds indexed for inflation. Disallowed losses convert to NOL carryforwards subject to normal NOL rules.

  • Action: Time deductions/bonus depreciation and consider grouping elections to mitigate EBL.

8) Child Tax Credit Enhancements

OBBBA enhances the Child Tax Credit with adjusted amounts, partial refundability, and indexing. Income phase-outs continue to shape eligibility.

Checklist: Ensure each child has a valid SSN; coordinate with the Dependent Care Credit and EITC to maximize after-tax cash flow.

9) Estate, Gift & GST: Bigger, Permanent, Indexed

OBBBA increases the lifetime estate, gift, and GST exemptions, makes them permanent, and indexes for inflation. Portability and step-up in basis rules remain critical for married couples and heirs.

  • Action: Update wills, trusts, and beneficiary designations; consider Spousal Lifetime Access Trusts (SLATs) in high-net-worth cases.

10) Charitable Giving: New Floor, Higher AGI Limits & Credit

OBBBA introduces a permanent charitable contribution floor and increases AGI percentage limits for certain cash gifts to qualifying charities and funds, plus a targeted nonrefundable credit for eligible cash donations.

Tactics to Consider

  • Bunching gifts via a donor-advised fund (DAF)
  • QCDs for IRA owners aged 70½+
  • Appreciated assets to avoid capital gains

Watch-Outs

  • Substantiation rules for cash gifts
  • Coordination with the new floor and itemized limits

11) QSBS (Section 1202) Expansion

OBBBA broadens access to the Qualified Small Business Stock exclusion by adjusting eligible company thresholds and caps. Five-year holding and active business requirements remain foundational.

Early-stage investors: Track original issuance, C-corp status, and basis allocation for partial dispositions.

12) Personal Casualty & Theft Losses

Rules are updated for disaster-related personal casualty losses. Federal disaster declarations and thresholds determine eligibility; coordination with insurance proceeds is essential.

13) Temporary Deductions: Tips, Overtime, Vehicle Loan Interest

No Tax on Tips (2025–2028)

  • Deduction type: Above-the-line, up to $25,000 of qualified tips (subject to occupational and reporting rules).
  • Income phase-out: Begins for higher MAGI; deduction unavailable above upper thresholds.
  • Still taxable for: Payroll (FICA) and often state/local—federal income tax deduction only.
  • Records: Keep daily tip logs (cash, charged, pooling).

No Tax on Overtime (2025–2028)

  • Deduction type: Above-the-line for qualified overtime pay (definitions/limits apply).
  • Eligibility: W-2 employees receiving overtime as defined under wage-and-hour rules; self-employed generally not eligible for this specific deduction.

Qualified Passenger Vehicle Loan Interest (Temporary)

  • Who may benefit: Certain commuters and workers using qualifying vehicles that meet statutory criteria.
  • Key filter: Vehicle and financing must satisfy definition & U.S. assembly/use requirements, time-boxed to specified years.
Documentation is everything: Retain pay stubs, employer statements, and loan documents. Expect IRS guidance on definitions, caps, and substantiation.

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14) Year-End 2025 Planning Checklist for U.S. Individuals

High-Impact Items

  • Run a 2025 projection with the permanent brackets and your state tax parameters.
  • Re-optimize withholding or estimated payments to meet safe harbor (100%/110%/90% rules).
  • Evaluate SALT timing (property taxes, PTET where applicable) vs. AMT interactions.
  • Charitable strategy: Bunch gifts, use DAF/QCD, and track the new floor/limits.
  • Business owners: Validate 199A wage/UBIA and monitor EBL exposure.

Targeted Opportunities

  • Tipped/overtime workers: Keep meticulous logs; confirm MAGI thresholds.
  • Estate planning: Update documents to leverage the higher lifetime exemption.
  • QSBS: Confirm C-corp status and original issuance for new investments.
  • Casualty loss: Track disaster declarations and insurance claims.

15) Frequently Asked Questions

Does the 2025 law change my 2024 return?

No. OBBBA applies beginning with Tax Year 2025 (filed in 2026), unless a provision is explicitly retroactive.

Is the SALT cap really $40,000 for everyone?

It’s up to $40,000 based on filing status but phases down at higher incomes. The law preserves a minimum $10,000 deduction.

Are tips now completely tax-free?

No. “No Tax on Tips” is an income tax deduction (up to limits). Tips generally still count for FICA and may be taxable by your state.

What about the “No Tax on Overtime” deduction?

It provides an above-the-line deduction for qualifying overtime pay within statutory limits and years (2025–2028), primarily for W-2 employees.

Did AMT go away?

No. AMT remains, but higher exemptions mean fewer households will owe it.

Is the QBI (199A) deduction permanent now?

Yes—subject to SSTB and income limitations and other existing mechanics (wage/UBIA tests).

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Disclaimer: This article is for general information for U.S. individual taxpayers regarding the July 4, 2025 tax law (OBBBA). Deductions, caps, and income thresholds are subject to IRS guidance and state conformity. Always consult a qualified tax professional for advice on your circumstances.

Update Watch (IRS & Treasury): Monitor official guidance on No Tax on Tips, No Tax on Overtime, vehicle loan interest substantiation, SALT phase-down mechanics, and withholding tables. Keep pay records, tip logs, and loan documents to substantiate claims.

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